May vows to stay on and fight for Brexit agreement

The UK Prime Minister Theresa May has said she is going to 'see this through', after her deal to take Britain out of the EU was attacked by all quarters in parliament and Eurosceptics within her own party mounted a leadership challenge.

Transcript

Serving in high office is an honour and privilege. It is also a heavy responsibility. That is true at any time, but especially when the stakes are so high.

And negotiating the UK's withdrawal from the EU after 40 years and building from the ground up a new and enduring relationship for the good of our children and grandchildren is a matter of the highest consequence. It touches almost every area of our national life, our whole economy and virtually every job. The livelihoods of our fellow citizens, our integrity as a United Kingdom of four nations, our safety and security, all of these are at stake. My approach throughout has been to put the national interest first, not a partisan interest and certainly not my own political interest.

I do not judge harshly those of my colleagues who seek to do the same, but who reach a different conclusion. They must do what they believe to be right, just as I do. I am sorry that they've chosen to leave the government. And I thank them for their service.

But I believe with every fibre of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people. From the very beginning, I have known what I wanted to deliver for the British people to honour their vote in the referendum - full control of our borders by bringing an end to the free movement of people once and for all, full control of our money so we decide ourselves how to spend it on priorities like our NHS, full control of our laws by ending the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in the United Kingdom, getting us out of the Common Agricultural Policy and Common Fisheries Policy for good. That is exactly what this agreement will deliver - free movement ended, vast annual payments stopped, the jurisdiction of the ECJ over, out of the CAP, out of the CFP. This is a Brexit that delivers on the priorities of the British people.

In achieving these objectives, I am also determined to protect the things that are important to us, protect the hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs that put food on the tables of working families right across the UK. Those jobs rely on cross-border trade in goods, with parts flowing easily in and out of the UK, allowing for integrated supply chains. This agreement protects that. Protects the close security co-operation that helps keep us safe, this agreement does that. Protects the integrity of the United Kingdom and peaceful settlement in Northern Ireland, by leaving the EU as one United Kingdom and having no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland. This agreement does that as well.

Yes, difficult and sometimes uncomfortable decisions have had to be made. I understand fully that there are some who are unhappy with those compromises. But this deal delivers what people voted for and it is in the national interest. And we can only secure it if we unite behind the agreement reached in cabinet yesterday.

If we do not move forward with that agreement, nobody can know for sure the consequences that will follow. It would be to take a path of deep and grave uncertainty when the British people just want us to get on with it. They are looking to the Conservative party to deliver, to deliver a Brexit that works for the whole UK, a strong economy that keeps jobs safe and wages rising, and first-class public services we can rely on, an NHS there for all of us, great schools for every child, and for homes that families need. That is what the people we serve expect. And that is what we owe it to them to deliver.